Beckham recalled to England squad

YARM, England -- David Beckham was recalled to England's
national team Friday for what could be Steve McClaren's last games
as coach.

The Los Angeles Galaxy midfielder sprained his right knee in
August and missed England's 3-0 victories against Israel and Russia
at Wembley in September.

"He's an important player for England. He always has been over the years," McClaren said. "I think he proved in his comeback in
the summer against Brazil and Estonia he was one of our best
players and unfortunately he got injured."

The former England captain also was out for England's 2-1 defeat in Russia last month, which leaves qualification for the 2008
European Championship out of McClaren's hands.

Beckham is now back for next Friday's friendly against Austria and the potentially decisive Nov. 21 Euro qualifier against
Croatia, which could be meaningless unless Israel beats Russia five
days earlier.

Just 15 months into the job, McClaren's prospects of staying on will be bleak if England fails to reach its first major tournament
since the 1994 World Cup.

Before the pivotal Israel-Russia game, England plays a friendly in Austria next Friday, when Beckham will be hoping to add to his
97 caps.

McClaren made a trip to Los Angeles last weekend to judge the fitness of Beckham, whom he initially dropped after taking over as
coach in August 2006.

"The injury is fine, the fitness is fine," McClaren said. "He
hasn't played games, but he is included in the squad because I
believe with the likes of Rio Ferdinand and John Terry out of the
squad we're lacking experience and big game players.

"David Beckham is one of them."

McClaren's assistant, Terry Venables, warned the Football
Association on Friday not to rush into a "knee-jerk reaction" if
England failed to advance to next year's tournament in Switzerland
and Austria.

"They must make sure they come to a decision for the right
reasons, not just because it seems right at one particular
moment," said Venables, who coached England to the Euro 96
semifinals. "We are not thinking about our futures."